On Monday 07 January 2013, Vineet Gupta wrote: > On Wednesday 07 November 2012 07:46 PM, Arnd Bergmann wrote: > > On Wednesday 07 November 2012, Vineet Gupta wrote: > > (1) Although I don't need the container "fpga" I'm forced to - because > of_platform_populate( ) -> of_match_node( ) expects the @match arg to be NOT NULL. > So we pass of_default_bus_match_table and have the compat string "simple-bus" in > the container. Per [1] it seemed it was possible to add the serial device directly > w/o the container. You could in theory make the serial port device itself be compatible to somthing that is being probed by of_platform_populate, but putting it under a bus is the preferred way. Usually each system has at least one bus that devices are connected to and I would recommend to represent all buses in the device tree like they are in hardware. > (2) I need the following OF_DEV_AUXDATA to be able to "name" the device correctly > so that the registered driver [4] can bind with device. How do I match the driver > and devicetree node w/o this glue - it seems compatible="<manuf>,<model>" is not > enough. This also requires the uart base address to be specified (otherwise > of_dev_lookup() fails to identify the auxdata) which IMHO defeats the purpose of > devicetree in first place. > b > static struct of_dev_auxdata arcuart_auxdata_lookup[] __initdata = { > OF_DEV_AUXDATA("snps,arc-uart", UART0_BASE, "arc-uart", arc_uart_info), > {} > }; It should be enough to fill the drv->of_match_table member of the platform_driver with the match table. > (3) After above, driver's probe routine is getting called with platform_device->id > = -1 and it seems of_device_add() is doing that purposely. How do I handle that. What do you need the id for? > (4) Is above standalone "interrupts" string OK, or do I have to explicitly > instantiate the in-core intc as well. Since it is integral part of cpu, I really > don't need any support code to explicitly instantiate it. Also it is not accessed > via mem map - but special ARC instructions in aux address space of cpu. Interrupts are a little tricky. You need to create a bindind for your interrupt controller first and make the irqchip driver use irq domains in order for the irq description in the device tree to be mapped into a linux-internal irq number. In the simple case where you only have one irqchip in the system, you can use a "legacy" irq domain that simply translates the numbers 1:1. In some cases, it does make sense though (even with the legacy domain) to include additional flags in the device tree irq descriptor, e.g. the irq polarity and edge/level/message indication. Please read up on these and ask again if you have more questions. Arnd -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-arch" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html